The classic UI uses ExtJS to create widgets that provide the look-and-feel of the components. Due to the nature of these widgets, there are some differences between how components interact with the classic UI and the touch-enabled UI.
Many aspects of component development are common to both the classic UI and the touch-enabled UI, so you must read AEM Components - The Basics before using this page, which deals with the specifics of the classic UI.
Although both the HTML Template Language (HTL) and JSP can be used for developing components for the classic UI, this page illustrates development with JSP. This is solely due to the history of using JSP within the classic UI.
HTL is now the recommended scripting language for AEM. See HTL and Developing AEM Components to compare methods.
The basic structure of a component is covered on the page AEM Components - The Basics, which applies both the touch-eanbeld and classic UIs. Even if you do not need to use the settings for the touch-enabled UI in your new component, it can help to be aware of them when inheriting from existing components.
JSP Scripts or Servlets can be used to render components. According to the request processing rules of Sling, the name for the default script is:
<*componentname*>.jsp
The JSP script file global.jsp
is used to provide quick access to specific objects (that is, to access content) to any JSP script file used to render a component.
Therefore global.jsp
should be included in every component rendering JSP script where one or more of the objects provided in global.jsp
are used.
The location of the default global.jsp
is:
/libs/foundation/global.jsp
The path /libs/wcm/global.jsp
, which was used by the versions CQ 5.3 and earlier, is now obsolete.
The following lists the most important objects provided from the default global.jsp
:
Summary:
<cq:defineObjects />
slingRequest
- The wrapped Request Object ( SlingHttpServletRequest
).slingResponse
- The wrapped Response Object ( SlingHttpServletResponse
).resource
- The Sling Resource Object ( slingRequest.getResource();
).resourceResolver
- The Sling Resource Resolver Object ( slingRequest.getResoucreResolver();
).currentNode
- The resolved JCR node for the request.log
- The Default logger ().sling
- The Sling script helper.properties
- The properties of the addressed resource ( resource.adaptTo(ValueMap.class);
).pageProperties
- The properties of the page of the addressed resource.pageManager
- The page manager for accessing AEM content pages ( resourceResolver.adaptTo(PageManager.class);
).component
- The component object of the current AEM component.designer
- The Designer object for retrieving design information ( resourceResolver.adaptTo(Designer.class);
).currentDesign
- The design of the addressed resource.currentStyle
- The style of the addressed resource.There are three methods to access content in AEM WCM:
Via the properties object introduced in global.jsp
:
The properties object is an instance of a ValueMap (see Sling API) and contains all properties of the current resource.
Example: String pageTitle = properties.get("jcr:title", "no title");
used in the rendering script of a page component.
Example: String paragraphTitle = properties.get("jcr:title", "no title");
used in the rendering script of a standard paragraph component.
Via the currentPage
object introduced in global.jsp
:
The currentPage
object is an instance of a page (see AEM API). The page class provides some methods to access content.
Example: String pageTitle = currentPage.getTitle();
Via currentNode
object introduced in global.jsp
:
The currentNode
object is an instance of a node (see JCR API). The properties of a node can be accessed by the getProperty()
method.
Example: String pageTitle = currentNode.getProperty("jcr:title");
The CQ and Sling tag libraries give you access to specific functions for use in the JSP script of your templates and components.
For more information, see the document Tag Libraries.
Modern websites rely heavily on client-side processing driven by complex JavaScript and CSS code. Organizing and optimizing the serving of this code can be a complicated issue.
To help deal with this issue, AEM provides Client-side Library Folders, which lets you store your client-side code in the repository, organize it into categories and define when and how each category of code is to be served to the client. The client-side library system then takes care of producing the correct links in your final web page to load the correct code.
See the document Using Client-Side HTML Libraries for more information.
Your component needs a dialog for authors to add and configure the content.
See AEM Components - The Basics for further details.
You can configure the edit behavior of a component. This includes attributes such as actions available for the component, characteristics of the inplace editor, and the listeners related to events on the component. The configuration is common to both the touch-enabled and classic UIs, albeit with certain, specific differences.
The edit behavior of a component is configured by adding a cq:editConfig
node of type cq:EditConfig
below the component node (of type cq:Component
) and by adding specific properties and child nodes.
See Using and Extending ExtJS Widgets for more details.
See Using xtypes for more details.
This section describes how to create your own components and add them to the paragraph system.
A quick way to get started is to copy an existing component and then make the changes you want.
An example of how to develop a component is described in detail in Extending the Text and Image Component - An Example.
To develop new components for AEM based on existing component, you can copy the component, create a JavaScript file for the new component, and store it in a location accessible to AEM (see also Customizing Components and Other Elements):
Using CRXDE Lite, create a component folder in:
/ apps/<myProject>/components/<myComponent>
Recreate the node structure as in libs, then copy the definition of an existing component, such as the Text component. For example, to customize the Text component copy:
/libs/foundation/components/text
/apps/myProject/components/text
Modify the jcr:title
to reflect its new name.
Open the new component folder and make the changes you require. Also, delete any extraneous information in the folder.
You can make changes such as:
adding a field in the dialog box
cq:dialog
- dialog for the touch-enabled UIdialog
- dialog for the classic UIreplacing the .jsp
file (name it after your new component)
or completely reworking the entire component if you want
For example, if you take a copy of the standard Text component, you can add an extra field to the dialog box, then update the .jsp
to process the input made there.
A component for the:
A dialog defined for the classic UI operates within the touch-enabled UI.
A dialog defined for the touch-enabled UI will not operate within the classic UI.
Depending on your instance and author environment, you might want to define both types of dialog for your component.
One of the following nodes should be present and properly initialized for the new component to appear:
cq:dialog
- dialog for the touch-enabled UIdialog
- dialog for the classic UIcq:editConfig
- how components behave in the edit environment (for example, drag and drop)design_dialog
- dialog for design mode (classic UI only)Activate the new component in your paragraph system by either:
<path-to-component>
(for example, /apps/geometrixx/components/myComponent
) to the property components of the node /etc/designs/geometrixx/jcr:content/contentpage/par
In AEM WCM, open a page in your web site and insert a paragraph of the type you created to make sure that the component is working properly.
To see timing statistics for page loading, you can use Ctrl-Shift-U - with ?debugClientLibs=true
set in the URL.
After the component has been developed, you add it to the paragraph system, which enables authors to select and use the component when editing a page.
Access a page within your authoring environment that uses the paragraph system, for example, <contentPath>/Test.html
.
Switch to Design mode by either:
adding ?wcmmode=design
to the end of the URL and accessing again, for example:
<contextPath>/ Test.html?wcmmode=design
clicking Design in Sidekick
You are now in design mode and can edit the paragraph system.
Click Edit.
A list of components belonging to the paragraph system are shown. Your new component is also listed.
The components can be activated (or deactivated) to determine which are offered to the author when editing a page.
Activate your component, then return to normal edit mode to confirm that it is available for use.
This section provides an example of how to extend the widely used text and image standard component with a configurable image placement feature.
The extension to the text and image component allows editors to use all the existing functionality of the component plus have an extra option to specify the placement of the image either:
After extending this component, you can configure the image placement through the component’s dialog box.
The following techniques are described in this exercise:
This example is targeted at the classic UI.
This example is based on the Geometrixx sample content, which is no longer shipped with AEM, having been replaced by We.Retail. See the document We.Retail Reference Implementation for how to download and install Geometrixx.
To create the component, you use the standard textimage component as a basis and modify it. You store the new component in the Geometrixx AEM WCM example application.
Copy the standard textimage component from /libs/foundation/components/textimage
into the Geometrixx component folder, /apps/geometrixx/components
, using textimage as the target node name. (Copy the component by navigating to the component, right-clicking and selecting Copy and browsing to the target directory.)
To keep this example simple, navigate to the component you copied and delete all the subnodes of the new textimage node except for the following ones:
textimage/dialog
textimage/textimage.jsp
textimage/cq:editConfig
The dialog definition depends on the UI:
textimage/cq:dialog
textimage/dialog
Edit the component metadata:
Component name
jcr:description
to Text Image Component (Extended)
jcr:title
to Text Image (Extended)
Group, where the component is listed in the sidekick (leave as is)
componentGroup
set to General
Parent component for the new component (the standard textimage component)
sling:resourceSuperType
to foundation/components/textimage
After this step, the component node looks like this:
Change the sling:resourceType
property of the edit configuration node of the image (property: textimage/cq:editConfig/cq:dropTargets/image/parameters/sling:resourceType
) to geometrixx/components/textimage.
This way, when an image is dropped to the component on the page, the sling:resourceType
property of the extended textimage component is set to: geometrixx/components/textimage.
Modify the component’s dialog box to include the new option. The new component inherits the parts of the dialog box that are the same as in the original. The only addition that you make is to extend the Advanced tab, adding an Image Position dropdown list, with options Left and Right:
textimage/dialog
properties unchanged.Note how textimage/dialog/items
has four subnodes, tab1 to tab4, representing the four tabs of the textimage dialog box.
For the first two tabs (tab1 and tab2):
/libs/foundation/components/textimage/dialog/items/tab1.infinity.json
and /libs/foundation/components/textimage/dialog/items/tab2.infinity.json
, respectively.For tab3:
Leave the properties and subnodes without changes
Add a field definition to tab3/items
, node position of type cq:Widget
Set the following properties (of type String) for the new tab3/items/position
node:
name
: ./imagePosition
xtype
: selection
fieldLabel
: Image Position
type
: select
Add subnode position/options
of type cq:WidgetCollection
to represent the two choices for image placement, and under it create two nodes, o1 and o2 of type nt:unstructured
.
For node position/options/o1
set the properties: text
to Left
and value
to left.
For node position/options/o2
set the properties: text
to Right
and value
to right
.
Delete tab4.
Image position is persisted in content as the imagePosition
property of the node representing textimage
paragraph. After these steps, the component dialog box looks like this:
Extend the component script, textimage.jsp
, with extra handling of the new parameter:
Image image = new Image(resource, "image");
if (image.hasContent() || WCMMode.fromRequest(request) == WCMMode.EDIT) {
image.loadStyleData(currentStyle);
You are going to replace the emphasized code fragment %><div class=“image”><% with new code generating a custom style for this tag.
// todo: add new CSS class for the 'right image' instead of using
// the style attribute
String style="";
if (properties.get("imagePosition", "left").equals("right")) {
style = "style=\"float:right\"";
}
%><div <%= style %> class="image"><%
Save the component to the repository. The component is ready to test.
After the component has been developed, you can add it to the paragraph system, which enables authors to select and use the component when editing a page. These steps let you test the component.
The component stores its content in a paragraph on the Company page.
To disable this capability, you use the standard image component as a basis and modify it. You store the new component in the Geometrixx example application.
Copy the standard image component from /libs/foundation/components/image
into the Geometrixx component folder, /apps/geometrixx/components
, using image as the target node name.
Edit the component metadata:
Image (Extended)
Navigate to /apps/geometrixx/components/image/dialog/items/image
.
Add a property:
allowUpload
String
false
Click Save All. The component is ready to test.
Open a page in Geometrixx such as English / Company.
Switch to design mode and activate Image (Extended).
Switch back to the editing mode and add it to the paragraph system. On the next pictures, you can see the differences between the original image component and the one that you created.
Original image component:
Your new image component:
The component is now ready to use.